blindworm, slowwormAnguis fragilisalso called Slowworm (Anguis fragilis), blindworma legless lizard of the family Anguidae. It lives in grassy areas and open woodlands in from Great Britain and throughout Europe eastward to the Caucasus Mountains. The adult is about 30 centimetres (1 foot) long, but some specimens grow to 50 cm. They are usually brown, chestnut, gray, bronze, brick red, or coppery. The female’s underside is usually black.The lizard eats snails and slugs and other soft animals, using pointed, fanglike teeth. Internal pelvic girdles are the only vestiges of legsUrals and Caspian Sea. Adults reach 40 to 45 cm (16 to 18 inches) in body length, but the tail can be up to two times the length from snout to vent. External limbs and girdles are absent, and only a remnant of the pelvic girdle persists internally. Its elongated body form, combined with an absence of limbs, gives the slowworm its snakelike appearance. Unlike snakes, however, slowworms have ear openings and eyelids.

The diet of A. fragilis is made up of snails, slugs, earthworms, other soft-bodied invertebrates, and some vertebrates. They are live-bearers that mate in spring and give birth to 8 to 12 young in late summer (see glass snake).